See all green space and lower density in old Rainier
Vista remaining on eastside of Rainier.

Formerly at Rainier Vista, low income residents had access to their own
yards and then a common courtyard where kids and families from all races
could commingle. There were community gardens in these courtyards and
park benches and picnic tables. Everyone knew each other and had room to
socialize and recreate together

These are the kinds of places many of the former
public housing residents are now living inódense apartment buildings and
they are consigned to the peripheries of the development and segregated
from more affluent homeowners higher up and with the the views

Low income segregated here in new projects

Othello Building:
This is part of the New Holly Project where low income will be shuffled
off to along main drag

Placing the poor in
cramped and tighter quarters while the more affluent residents get the
views and the $500,000 homeowner unitsóA new kind of segregation

New Holly (above) looks more like South Chicago's Cabrini Green (below):